our name

Tikkun Olam has been translated as the mending of the world. This practice draws from the Kabbalistic ideas of Isaac Luria, a sixteenth century Jewish mystic.

He believed that when God created the world, God formed vessels to hold the Divine Light. As the light began to fill the vessels, they were unable to contain divinity and shattered. Sparks of Divine light were trapped in the shards of these vessels; they scattered throughout the cosmos and formed our world. The task of humanity is to reunite the scattered sparks of Light, to repair the broken world, and thus participate in finishing God’s work.

— Myke Johnson

Liz holding scrolls

our story

In 2016 as the U.S.  was preparing for a Presidential election unlike any other, Isabel “Liz” P Dunst was preparing to celebrate a milestone birthday.  In addition to her birthday, she was just months away from retirement from her life-long career as a health care attorney, first with the government and subsequently in the private sector.  Deeply engaged in the social issues that were arising, Liz looked to celebrate her birthday in a more unconventional way – by commissioning the composition of a new piece of social justice music. She expected that such a song might serve as a new contribution to the pantheon of social justice music that had always propelled and supported the activism in which she had engaged.  She hoped that this gift of song would both reactivate those who had long been involved in the fight for social justice and gift a new generation of activists with new music with which they might protest the ills around them.

“We affirm social action and social justice as a central prophetic focus of Reform Jewish belief and practice."

—from the Pittsburgh Platform

Instead of a single song, Liz’s request for new music sparked the writing of 40 new songs of social justice, eight of which were professionally recorded in a collection titled Together as One: New Songs of Social Justice. All proceeds from the album support the work of the Religious Action Center of the Union for Reform Judaism. Listen here.

The impact of this new music was enormous as “Liz’s songs” were sung at summer camps, in marches and in board rooms.  Acutely aware of the power of a single voice, Liz began to dream of supporting and developing additional projects that could impact the social justice issues about which she cared so deeply.

Buoyed by the impact of Together as One, in 2022 Liz created the Shards of Light Foundation to support new and sustainable initiatives that ignite engagement in racial equity and justice, women’s equity, change-making arts and progressive Jewish community work in the US and Israel.

our mission

Shards of Light is motivated by the Jewish value of tikkun olam – the obligation to repair the world.  We are a part of the movement working to end systemic racism in all its forms. We support innovative and sustainable programs that activate participants in the movement for racial equity and justice.  We do so by investing in organizations, projects and individuals committed to the work of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) both internally and externally and through our support of capacity building in non-profit organizations and transformational work in progressive Jewish life.

Shards of Light also supports organizations working to improve women’s lives; encourages the work of change-making artists whose work energizes social justice; funds the establishment and growth of Reform congregations in Israel as well as NGOs working to secure democracy and civil rights for all; and assists Reform Jewish communities to act on their Jewish values as they shift the work of tikkun olam from their sanctuaries and classrooms into the larger world.

In all of these areas, we are especially interested in seeding and developing young professionals and new organizations dedicated to the work of repairing the world.

Shards of Light does not accept unsolicited grant requests.

“We must act not just out of the goodness of our hearts but because it is our Jewish responsibility.”

— Rabbi Fred Reiner. Rabbi Emeritus, Temple Sinai, Washington, DC
Liz
Shards of Light recommends grants through the Isabel P. Dunst Philanthropic Fund, a donor advised fund of The Jewish Community Foundation of Greater Washington that support community organizations and visionary community leaders as they incubate and launch innovative and sustainable new social change projects.

Shards of Light does not accept unsolicited grant requests.

Shards of Light Ball vector logo

our team

Liz Dunst

"Ring the bells that still can ring
Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack, a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in"

— Leonard Cohen

FOUNDER Isabel “Liz” P Dunst

Isabel P Dunst (‘Liz”) is a longtime activist within the Jewish community, and currently serves on the Executive Committee of the Union for Reform Judaism, and as a member of the Board of Governors of Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion. She is the immediate past Chair of the Commission on Social Action of Reform Judaism, and remains an active member of the Commission, with a major interest in its racial justice agenda. She has served in many positions in her home congregation (Temple Sinai DC), including serving as its president.  She is currently working in the temple as a member of Multi-Racial Sinai to fulfill the temples’ commitment to undertake the transformational steps to affirm and enhance its identity as a multiracial Reform Jewish Community, and to become an affirmatively antiracist community. Liz is active in the broader Jewish social justice community, having served as a member of the Board of Directors, of Bend the Arc and on the Advisory Board to JOIN for Justice (Jewish Organizing Institute and Network).

Her advocacy on the issues regarding the equality of women is also long-standing- sparked by her rejection at the age of 14 of becoming a page in the U.S. Senate because it was not deemed a position “suitable for girls” – and extending to the issues of discrimination during her law school years, and with the founding of the Women’s Legal Defense Fund in 1971 (now the Partnership for Women and Families) in which she remains involved.

Liz carries a strong passion for hands-on social justice work which has included trips to New Orleans to help rebuild the city and standing guard at Planned Parenthood Clinics, where she felt the power of “making a difference with our bodies”.  Liz is committed to raising up the next generation of leaders to continue the fight for social justice.

Liz currently resides in the Washington DC area, and holds degrees from the University of Wisconsin, the New York University School of Law and the Harvard School of Public Health. Professionally Liz has practiced law for almost 50 years.  Almost half of her career was spent in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, culminating in her service as its Deputy General Counsel, the senior legal position. The remainder of her career was spent as a partner at Hogan Lovells, LLP (formerly Hogan & Hartson), an international law firm, where she practiced law on a broad array of health care issues, and led the firm’s Health practice.  She retired from the active practice of law in 2019 to pursue her passion for social justice.

Peri Smilow

"Each one of us must listen well
Wake up and heed the call
Step in – reach out – lift up
One voice still matters after all"

— from the song ONE. Music and lyrics by Peri Smilow

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Peri Smilow

Educator, musician, youth worker and non-profit entrepreneur, Peri Smilow was raised in a household that valued racial equality, Jewish values, volunteerism and a commitment to civic participation. She spent a summer in her teens visiting with and providing community service to a number of deeply impoverished communities including coal miners in Appalachia and former sharecropper families in the Black Belt of Alabama. These experiences provided a first-hand introduction to the structural inequities in American society and planted in Peri a life-long passion to understand and work towards the dismantling of these historical inequities.

Peri’s introduction to Jewish life came through her synagogue. She spent six months living in Israel as a participant in the Reform Movement’s EIE high-school abroad program. She returned conversationally fluent in Hebrew and began a life-long relationship with and connection to the country and its people.

After graduating from Wesleyan University with a B.A. in Letters, Peri served in leadership roles in a wide array of non-profit youth serving organizations in Boston and NYC.  She also worked as a musical theater performer, attaining membership in Actor’s Equity, and led educational travel trips for teens in China, Israel and the former Soviet Union. Peri went on to complete an M.Ed. from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and is a proud graduate of LeadBoston and the National Coalition Building Institute’s year-long diversity training program.

More recently Peri served as the National Director of Program and Engagement for ARZA, the Reform Movement’s Israel organization and was the first Director of Intergenerational Program Engagement at DOROT, a nationally recognized senior service organization.

Throughout her years of non-profit leadership Peri maintained her connection to the Jewish community serving as Cantorial Soloist in Reform Jewish congregations. While working in congregational life Peri began to compose and perform contemporary Jewish music. Over time, Peri and her music became a feature of the Reform Movement (URJ) nation-wide. Not surprisingly, her music focuses on themes of social justice and community engagement. Interest in her music led Peri to become a nationally recognized recording and touring artist. For 25+ years Peri used her music as a tool for social change throughout the US, Canada, England, Israel and Singapore.

For her work Peri has been recognized with the Beloved Community Award in her community of South Orange, NJ as well as a lifetime achievement award from ARZA. Peri’s most cherished role is being mom to daughter Allie.

our team

Liz Dunst

FOUNDER Isabel “Liz” P Dunst

Isabel P Dunst (‘Liz”) is a longtime activist within the Jewish community, and currently serves on the Executive Committee of the Union for Reform Judaism, and as a member of the Board of Governors of Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion. She is the immediate past Chair of the Commission on Social Action of Reform Judaism, and remains an active member of the Commission, with a major interest in its racial justice agenda. She has served in many positions in her home congregation (Temple Sinai DC), including serving as its president.  She is currently working in the temple as a member of Multi-Racial Sinai to fulfill the temples’ commitment to undertake the transformational steps to affirm and enhance its identity as a multiracial Reform Jewish Community, and to become an affirmatively antiracist community. Liz is active in the broader Jewish social justice community, having served as a member of the Board of Directors, of Bend the Arc and on the Advisory Board to JOIN for Justice (Jewish Organizing Institute and Network).

Her advocacy on the issues regarding the equality of women is also long-standing- sparked by her rejection at the age of 14 of becoming a page in the U.S. Senate because it was not deemed a position “suitable for girls” – and extending to the issues of discrimination during her law school years, and with the founding of the Women’s Legal Defense Fund in 1971 (now the Partnership for Women and Families) in which she remains involved.

Liz carries a strong passion for hands-on social justice work which has included trips to New Orleans to help rebuild the city and standing guard at Planned Parenthood Clinics, where she felt the power of “making a difference with our bodies”.  Liz is committed to raising up the next generation of leaders to continue the fight for social justice.

Liz currently resides in the Washington DC area, and holds degrees from the University of Wisconsin, the New York University School of Law and the Harvard School of Public Health. Professionally Liz has practiced law for almost 50 years.  Almost half of her career was spent in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, culminating in her service as its Deputy General Counsel, the senior legal position. The remainder of her career was spent as a partner at Hogan Lovells, LLP (formerly Hogan & Hartson), an international law firm, where she practiced law on a broad array of health care issues, and led the firm’s Health practice.  She retired from the active practice of law in 2019 to pursue her passion for social justice.

"Ring the bells that still can ring
Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack, a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in"

—Leonard Cohen
Peri Smilow

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Peri Smilow

Educator, musician, youth worker and non-profit entrepreneur, Peri Smilow was raised in a household that valued racial equality, Jewish values, volunteerism and a commitment to civic participation. She spent a summer in her teens visiting with and providing community service to a number of deeply impoverished communities including coal miners in Appalachia and former sharecropper families in the Black Belt of Alabama. These experiences provided a first-hand introduction to the structural inequities in American society and planted in Peri a life-long passion to understand and work towards the dismantling of these historical inequities.

Peri’s introduction to Jewish life came through her synagogue. She spent six months living in Israel as a participant in the Reform Movement’s EIE high-school abroad program. She returned conversationally fluent in Hebrew and began a life-long relationship with and connection to the country and its people.

After graduating from Wesleyan University with a B.A. in Letters, Peri served in leadership roles in a wide array of non-profit youth serving organizations in Boston and NYC.  She also worked as a musical theater performer, attaining membership in Actor’s Equity, and led educational travel trips for teens in China, Israel and the former Soviet Union. Peri went on to complete an M.Ed. from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and is a proud graduate of LeadBoston and the National Coalition Building Institute’s year-long diversity training program.

More recently Peri served as the National Director of Program and Engagement for ARZA, the Reform Movement’s Israel organization and was the first Director of Intergenerational Program Engagement at DOROT, a nationally recognized senior service organization.

Throughout her years of non-profit leadership Peri maintained her connection to the Jewish community serving as Cantorial Soloist in Reform Jewish congregations. While working in congregational life Peri began to compose and perform contemporary Jewish music. Over time, Peri and her music became a feature of the Reform Movement (URJ) nation-wide. Not surprisingly, her music focuses on themes of social justice and community engagement. Interest in her music led Peri to become a nationally recognized recording and touring artist. For 25+ years Peri used her music as a tool for social change throughout the US, Canada, England, Israel and Singapore.

For her work Peri has been recognized with the Beloved Community Award in her community of South Orange, NJ as well as a lifetime achievement award from ARZA. Peri’s most cherished role is being mom to daughter Allie.

"Each one of us must listen well
Wake up and heed the call
Step in – reach out – lift up
One voice still matters after all"

— from the song ONE. Music and lyrics by Peri Smilow
Logo reversed

Shards of Light does not accept unsolicited grant requests.
Copyright 2023 Shards of Light
Site by Tom Beckham

Shards of Light Logo

Shards of Light does not accept unsolicited grant requests.
Copyright 2023 Shards of Light
Site by Tom Beckham